General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How can Snowden be a traitor if the NSA program is a figment of his imagination? [View all]pnwmom
(110,261 posts)he shared documents related to our spying on China with a Chinese newspaper while Obama was negotiating with China about their hacking.
And he shared documents related to our spying on Russia with Russia. That's not under dispute either.
Going public about programs related to US internal surveillance could be classified as whistle blowing.
But going public about programs related to US spying on other countries -- which he has done and continues to threaten to do -- moves into acts of espionage, and possibly treason, depending on what he has in the thousands of documents he claims to possess. If he actually releases documents containing names of American agents around the world, and releases them -- i.e., lists of Valerie Plames -- then releasing those names would be an act of treason, IMHO.
It doesn't matter that someone in the Bush administration did the same thing. Just because one person got away with a criminal act doesn't mean someone else should.